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BIODIVERSITY

AND
ECOSYSTEMS
OECD WORK ON
Biodiversity
and ecosystems
OECD WORK ON
We urgently need more ambitious and
effective policies to promote biodiversity
conservation and sustainable use.
Simon Upton, Environment Director, OECD
2014
Contents
Biodiversity in the international context 6
Economic and policy analysis of biodiversity 8
Biodiversity indicators, valuation and assessment 8
Economic instruments, incentives and policies for biodiversity 10
Biodiversity nance, development and distributional issues 12
Sector-specic analysis 16
Biodiversity and Climate change 16
Biodiversity and Water 17
Biodiversity and Agriculture 17
Biodiversity and Fisheries 18
Biodiversity and Biotechnology 19
Publications and reports 24
www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity
Biodiversity is fundamental to sustaining life, supplying critical
ecosystem services such as food provisioning, water purication,
ood and drought control, nutrient cycling, and climate regulation.
These services are essential to support human well-being and
economic growth. Yet despite the signicant economic, social and
cultural values of biodiversity and ecosystem services, biodiversity
worldwide is being lost, and in some areas at an accelerating rate.
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has been
working on the economics and policies related to biodiversity for more than two decades.
The OECD supports governments by providing the analytical foundation to develop policies
that promote the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity. Such policies must be
environmentally effective, economically efcient, and distributionally equitable.
A central challenge in responding to biodiversity loss and degradation is the integration
and mainstreaming of biodiversity policy objectives into economic development strategies
and sectoral policies.
In the wake of the economic crisis, the OECD is also looking at how measures that
governments are taking to spur economic growth can best be formulated so that they
support or at least, do not work against the objectives of moving towards a green, low-
carbon and biodiversity-rich economy. The OECD is in a unique position to assist countries
in putting biodiversity conservation and sustainable use policies on a solid economic
footing consistent with green growth. Work on biodiversity is underway across the OECD,
engaging government representatives from a wide range of ministries. This brochure
provides an overview of the recent and on-going OECD work on biodiversity.
THE ORGANISATION FOR ECONOMIC
CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT
The OECD is a multi-disciplinary inter-
governmental organisation, tracing its roots
back to the post-World War II Marshall Plan.
Today, it comprises 34 member countries
committed to democratic government
and the market economy, with the major
emerging economies increasingly engaged in
the work. A unique forum, the OECD provides
the analytical capacity and comparative
data to assist governments in evaluating
and exchanging policy experiences and to
identify, recommend and promote cost-
eective policy practices.
OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
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5
In 2002, parties to the CBD adopted a strategic plan to achieve
by 2010 a signicant reduction of the current rate of biodiversity
loss at the global, regional and national level as a contribution
to poverty alleviation and to the benet of all life on Earth
(the 2010 target; Decision VI/26). This target was subsequently
endorsed by the World Summit on Sustainable Development
and incorporated as a target under the Millennium
Development Goals. It is widely acknowledged however, that
the 2010 biodiversity target was not met. Recognising the
importance of this global environment problem, the United
Nations General Assembly declared 2011-20 the United Nations
Decade on Biodiversity.
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
Biodiversity in the
international context
Biodiversity is dened as the variability among living organisms from
all sources, including, inter alia, terrestrial, marine, and other aquatic
ecosystems, and the ecological complexes of which they are part: this
includes diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems
(CBD, 1992).
The three ultimate objectives of the 1992 UN Convention on
Biological Diversity (CBD) are:
1. the conservation of biological diversity;
2. the sustainable use of its components;
3. the fair and equitable sharing of the benets arising out of the
utilisation of genetic resources.
The tenth meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP-10) to the CBD in
2010, held in Nagoya, Japan, led to the successful agreement on a revised
Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020 and the Aichi Biodiversity
Targets. In addition, Parties adopted a Strategy for Resource Mobilisation,
a consolidated list of guidance to the nancial mechanism, and an
international regime for Access and Benets Sharing (i.e. for the
equitable sharing of the benets arising out of the utilisation of genetic
resources). CBD COP-11 in October 2012, in Hyderabad, India focused
on addressing implementation issues and established, for example, an
indicator framework to monitor progress on the implementation of the
Aichi Biodiversity Targets and the Strategy for Resource Mobilisation.
The OECDs analysis supports the work of the CBD.
OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY IN THE INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
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USD 150-440 billion per year
The nance needs estimated for implementing the
twenty Aichi Biodiversity Targets.
BIODIVERSITY INDICATORS, VALUATION
AND ASSESSMENT
Economic and policy analysis by the OECD focuses on
the valuation of biodiversity, and the use of economic
instruments, incentives and other policies to promote
the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and
associated ecosystem services.
Biodiversity indicators and economic valuation enable the
quantiable assessment and comparison of biodiversity benets
across space and time. This is essential for the design and
implementation of effective biodiversity policies. The OECDs
work evaluates best practice in the use of biodiversity indicators
and valuation for policy, and regularly provides economic and
environmental analysis of biodiversity trends and outlooks, including
modelling-based analysis.
The OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction
(2012) focused on four environmental themes, identied as most
critical in previous OECD work, of which biodiversity is one. The main
drivers of projected global biodiversity loss are land use change and
management (e.g. for pasture, food crops and bioenergy), commercial
forestry, infrastructure development, habitat encroachment and
Economic and policy analysis
of biodiversity
fragmentation, as well as invasive alien species,
pollution (e.g. nitrogen deposition) and climate change.
Key priorities identied for biodiversity in the
Outlook include adopting more ambitious policy
measures and scaling up private-sector engagement,
mainstreaming biodiversity into other policy areas,
reforming environmentally harmful subsidies, and
improving the quantity and quality of data to inform
biodiversity policy.
In February 2013, the OECD organised a seminar, jointly with
Frances General Commission for Sustainable Development, on
The assessment of ecosystem services and its role in public
policy-making. Highlighting examples of how valuation has
been used in public policy, discussion at the seminar focused
on how to strengthen the impact of ecosystem assessments.
A report on The role of national ecosystem assessments in
inuencing policy making is due in 2014.
Current work underway at the OECD on biodiversity indicators
is looking at types of policy response indicators that may
contribute to measuring progress towards Aichi Biodiversity
Target 3 (on incentives) and Target 20 (on resource mobilisation).
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
USD 192 billion
The worldwide economic value of
pollination services provided by insect
pollinators, estimated in 2005
Eects of dierent pressures on terrestrial MSA: Baseline, 2010 to 2050
Source: OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050, OECD, 2012.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/888932570943
100
90
80
70
60
0-50
MSA (%)
2010 2030 2050
World
Infrastructure,
encroachment
and fragmentation
Climate change
Nitrogen
Former land use
Forestry
Pasture
Bioenergy
Food crop
Remaining MSA
M
e
a
n

S
p
e
c
i
e
s

A
b
u
n
d
a
n
c
e

(
M
S
A
)
The Environmental Outlook projects that, without
renewed eorts to halt the loss of biodiversity,
a further 10% of biodiversity (measured in
terrestrial Mean Species Abundance) will be lost
by 2050, from 2010 levels.
Did you know...?
ECONOMIC AND POLICY ANALYSIS OF BIODIVERSITY
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Key links:
www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity
www.oecd.org/environment/outlookto2050
www.oecd.org/env/indicators
www.oecd.org/env/countryreviews
Other OECD work on biodiversity includes the
country-specic Environmental Performance
Reviews (EPRs). The EPRs examine actions
taken by countries to meet both domestic
objectives and international commitments,
including in the area of nature and
biodiversity management. Recent country
reviews with chapters on biodiversity include
Norway, Israel, Mexico, South Africa and
Columbia. Two reviews that are currently underway will also examine
biodiversity: the review of Spain will have a biodiversity chapter
while the review of Poland will focus on forestry and biodiversity. In
addition, the review of Sweden, also underway, will include a chapter
on marine ecosystem services. These biodiversity chapters focus on
cost-effective ways to manage conservation and sustainable use, as
well as approaches to better integrate biodiversity and other policies,
e.g. for water management, agriculture, and forestry.
There are more than 300 PES programmes
implemented worldwide and ve national
PES programmes alone are channelling
more than USD 6.5 billion annually.
Did you know...?
ECONOMIC INSTRUMENTS, INCENTIVES
AND POLICIES FOR BIODIVERSITY
The local, regional, and global public
good benets of biodiversity are often
undervalued in the market. This leads to
excess biodiversity loss and degradation.
The OECDs work analyses how market and government failures can
be addressed through the use of cost-effective policy instruments
to ensure the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity,
ecosystem services and other natural resources.
The OECDs long-standing work on economic instruments resulted
in the adoption, in 2004, of an OECD Council Recommendation on
the Use of Economic Instruments in Promoting the Conservation
and Sustainable Use of Biodiversity. A 2008 report on the
implementation of that Council Recommendation takes stock of
the economic instruments that have been introduced or further
strengthened since its adoption. Aiming to support policy
makers, the report provides an overview of what economic
instruments are more commonly used for particular policy
objectives and across different areas, as well as when and
where economic instruments are less frequently applied, thus
identifying where further progress is needed.
A 2010 OECD publication, Paying for
Biodiversity: Enhancing the Cost-Effectiveness
of Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES),
identies good practice in the design and
implementation of PES programmes so as to
enhance their environmental effectiveness
at a lower economic cost. Drawing on theory
and more than 30 case studies worldwide, the
publication highlights lessons learned from
existing programmes and insights on how to
make PES more environmentally and cost effective. An expert
workshop on this issue was convened in March 2010.
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
The OECD is currently examining biodiversity offsets. Key questions
this work intends to address include:
lWhat are biodiversity offsets and how do they work?
lHow do they compare relative to other instruments available for
biodiversity conservation and sustainable use, and how have
existing programmes fared to date?
lWhat are the key design and implementation features that
need to be considered to ensure that they are environmentally
effective, economically efcient, and distributionally equitable?
lWhat lessons and insights can be derived for good practice?
As part of this work, the OECD convened an international expert
workshop on Biodiversity Offsets: Examining Opportunities and
Challenges, on 6-7 November, 2013. The workshop brought together
governments, the private sector, IGOs and NGOs, as well as other
experts and practitioners, to exchange experiences and lessons
learned associated with biodiversity offset schemes. It examined the
technical and analytical issues related to their effective design and
implementation and aimed to derive insights on and examples of
good practice. Insights from the workshop will feed into the OECD
publication on biodiversity offsets (due in 2014).
ECONOMIC AND POLICY ANALYSIS OF BIODIVERSITY
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Key links:
www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity/pes
www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity-osets-workshop.htm

BIODIVERSITY FINANCE, DEVELOPMENT
AND DISTRIBUTIONAL ISSUES
The conservation and sustainable use
of biodiversity requires nance and
investment from the public and private
sector. OECD work considers how these
nancial ows can be scaled-up, while enhancing the cost-
effectiveness of existing biodiversity nancing.
In May 2012, a workshop on Finance Mechanisms for Biodiversity:
Examining Opportunities and Challenges, was convened by the OECD,
World Bank, GEF, European Commission, together with Sweden
and India in Montreal, Canada. The workshop brought together
participants from governments, experts and practitioners from
a wide range of countries to exchange views and experiences
with different types of nance mechanisms for biodiversity, and
to explore the most promising avenues for effectively scaling up
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
There are more than 50 biodiversity oset
programmes in place around the world.
In 2011, these mobilised between USD 2.4
and 4 billion.
nance. The workshop aimed to foster an informal dialogue
on key opportunities and challenges associated with nance
mechanisms and to examine the technical and analytical issues
related to their effective design and implementation.
An OECD publication, entitled Scaling-up
Finance Mechanisms for Biodiversity, was
released in 2013. The book considers
opportunities for scaling-up nance for
biodiversity from six so-called innovative
nancial mechanisms, as classied under the
Convention on Biological Diversity:
lenvironmental scal reform;

lpayments for ecosystem services;
lbiodiversity offsets;
lmarkets for green products;
lbiodiversity in climate change funding;
l biodiversity in international development nance.
Did you know...?

Drawing on literature and more than 40 case studies worldwide, the
publication addresses the following questions:
lWhat are these nance mechanisms and how do they work?
lHow much nance have they mobilised and what potential is
there to scale this up?
lWhat are the key design and implementation issues
including environmental and social safeguards that need
to be addressed so that governments can help ensure these
mechanisms are environmentally effective, economically
efcient, and distributionally equitable?
ECONOMIC AND POLICY ANALYSIS OF BIODIVERSITY
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The distributional implications of biodiversity policies (which can
create both winners and loser) are also critical, as are the linkages
between biodiversity and development. Though biodiversity policies
can create signicant public benets and contribute to social well-
being, their implementation often benets different groups to a
greater or lesser degree. The source of these so-called distributive
effects lies in the policies objectives, and the choice and
implementation of policy instruments. Distributive effects inuence
the viability of biodiversity policies. Signicant negative impacts
on specic groups can lead to policies being derailed, even if they
make a large number of people better off. With sufcient planning,
however, potential problems can be identied and addressed.
Combining analysis and a wealth of case studies,
the 2008 OECD publication, People and Biodiversity
Policies: Impacts, Issues and Strategies for Policy
Action offers concepts and tools for addressing
distributive issues within a biodiversity policy
context. It aims to help policy makers put
together strategies for anticipating distributive
impacts across different groups; and for selecting
processes and instruments that manage
distributive impacts without compromising
conservation and sustainable use objectives.
Roughly half of the aid that DAC
members commit to biodiversity every
year targets agriculture, forestry, shing,
rural development, and water supply and
sanitation.
Did you know...?
Natural capital constitutes a quarter of total wealth in low-income
countries. OECDs 2008 book, Natural Resources and Pro-Poor Growth:
The Economics and Politics, demonstrates that natural resources can
contribute to growth, employment, exports and scal revenues. It
emphasises the need to focus on the political challenges of natural
resource management for long-term pro-poor economic growth, by
encouraging policies for the sustainable management of resources.
The OECD tracks bilateral aid in support of biodiversity. The
developed countries that signed the three Rio Conventions in
1992 committed themselves to assist developing countries in
the implementation of these Conventions. Since 1998 the OECD
Development Assistance Committee
1
(DAC) has monitored
aid targeting the objectives of the Rio Conventions through its
Creditor Reporting System using the so called Rio markers
including the Rio marker on biodiversity. Biodiversity-related
aid is dened as activities that promote at least one of the three
objectives of the CBD.
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
Trends in biodiversity-related aid, two-year averages
2006-2011, bilateral commitments, USD billion, constant 2011 prices
Significant Principal Biodiversity-related
share of total ODA
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
1.0
0.0
6%
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
0%
2006-07 2008-09 2010-11
U
S
D

b
i
l
l
i
o
n
s
S
h
a
r
e

o
f

t
o
t
a
l

O
D
A

(
%
)
Source: OECD DAC Statistics (2013)
1. The OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) is an international forum of many of the largest funders of
aid. It comprises 29 members; 28 donor governments plus the European Union. The World Bank, IMF and UNDP
participate as observers.
into Development Co-operation. It outlines 30 key actions that
international donors can take towards halting the loss of biodiversity
and associated ecosystems.
The OECD is currently developing a paper on Biodiversity and
Development Co-operation (due in 2014). This will review key statistics
and characteristics of ODA to biodiversity in partner developing
countries, assessing its alignment with the needs and priorities of
partner countries. The frameworks, strategies and mechanisms that
donor agencies use to mainstream biodiversity into development
planning in partner countries and into development co-operation
activities will also be examined. Furthermore, the paper will look
at mechanisms to effectively manage the synergies and trade-offs
involved in the development-biodiversity nexus, and to monitor and
evaluate the impacts of their biodiversity projects and programmes.
New work has recently begun to review and improve the Rio markers
in environment and development nance statistics. The overarching
goal is to ensure that DAC methodologies and data remain the
reference for the international community in measuring ofcial
development assistance (ODA) and other non-export credit other
ofcial ows related to climate change, biodiversity, desertication
and other environmental concerns. This will be achieved through
improving communications and outreach on the Rio markers,
reviewing options to improve the quality and robustness of the Rio
markers and their implementation, and increasing transparency and
accountability in reporting against the Rio Conventions (UNFCCC, CBD,
UNCCD).
In 2010, the OECD DAC developed and endorsed a Policy Statement
on Integrating Biodiversity and Associated Ecosystem Services
ECONOMIC AND POLICY ANALYSIS OF BIODIVERSITY
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Key links:
www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity/people
www.oecd.org/dac/stats
www.oecd.org/dac/environment
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
Sector-specic
analysis
A 2009 OECD working paper on Promoting
Biodiversity Co-Benets in Reducing Emissions
from Deforestation and Forest Degradation
(REDD) examines how biodiversity co-benets
in REDD can be enhanced, both at the design
and implementation level. It discusses potential
biodiversity implications of different REDD
design options that have been put forward in
the international climate change negotiations
and examines how the creation of additional
biodiversity-specic incentives could be used to complement a REDD
mechanism, so as to target biodiversity benets directly.
This paper built on discussion at an OECD expert workshop on
Capturing the Carbon and Biodiversity Benets for Reducing Deforestation:
Linkages, Synergies and Limitations, held in March 2008.

Previous work at the OECD has examined the implications of climate
change and adaptation opportunities in critical ecosystems such as
Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and the Sundarbans in Bangladesh.

Many of the drivers of biodiversity loss and degradation are
determined by decisions that are made outside the domain of
environment ministries. Better policy coherence is needed at both
the national and international level to help mainstream biodiversity
into cross-sectoral policies. OECD work examines linkages between
biodiversity and climate change, water, agriculture and sheries, as
well as biotechnology.
BIODIVERSITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE
Biodiversity and climate change are
intrinsically linked. Climate change will
have signicant impacts on biological
diversity (e.g., shifting the distributional
location of some ecosystems as well as altering their composition,
including via impacts on invasive species) and thus will also affect
the quantity and quality of the services provided by ecosystems. It
is therefore essential to recognise the role of biodiversity in climate
change mitigation and adaptation strategies, through, inter alia,
carbon sequestration such as REDD-plus and ecosystem-based
adaptation, while taking action to minimise the adverse effects to
biodiversity as a result of climate change. Key links:
www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity
www.oecd.org/env/cc/redd
www.oecd.org/env/cc/adaptation.htm
BIODIVERSITY AND WATER
Water management and biodiversity are
closely intertwined. The OECD book Water
Security for Better Lives (2013) identies the
resilience of freshwater systems as one of
the four water-related risks that need to be
managed. It argues that setting acceptable levels of water risk should be
the result of well-informed policy choices which take trade-offs with other
related security objectives, including biodiversity, into account. The book
explores how biodiversity policy can enhance water security.
OECD work on the nancing of water resources management has
analysed, among other issues, how ecosystem management can be
considered and funded as a water management tool, alongside water
infrastructure and water governance needs, in national water policy
and practice. The OECD publication A Framework for Financing Water
Resources Management (2012) acknowledges biodiversity and ecosystem
conservation as a direct benet of improved water management.
According to the 2010 OECD publication Sustainable Management of Water
Resources in Agriculture, over-exploitation of water resources by agriculture
in certain areas is damaging ecosystems by reducing water ows below
minimum levels in rivers, lakes and wetlands, which is also detrimental to
recreational, shing and cultural uses of these ecosystems.
Key link: www.oecd.org/water
BIODIVERSITY AND AGRICULTURE
Agriculture is the major land and water user
in OECD and non-OECD countries. As such
it heavily impacts on biodiversity. The OECD
Compendium of Agri-environmental Indicators
(2013) shows that despite improvements
in environmental performance of agriculture
during the last decade, the results for
biodiversity are more mixed.
Although agriculture plays a relatively minor
role in most OECD countries in terms of its
contribution to GDP and employment, a wide
range of government policies provide signicant
support in many OECD countries. Support to
farmers in OECD countries has fallen in the
last two decades as measured by the percentage Producer Support
Estimate (PSE), from 30% of farmers total receipts in 1995-97 on
average to 19% in 2010-12. In total it amounted to an estimated
USD 253 billion on average per year in 2010-12. Such policies can have
important effects on biodiversity associated with agricultural activities.
Over recent decades, as a consequence of policy reform in many
OECD countries, there has been some shift away from production-
linked support (decoupling) which has thus enabled the sector
to respond to a greater extent to market signals, with potentially
positive implications for biodiversity. Nevertheless, production-linked
SECTOR-SPECIFIC ANALYSIS
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OECD WORK ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS
support still predominates. The effect of policies and policy reform
on biodiversity is, however, complex and varies across and within
countries. Policies to subsidise inputs (such as water) or outputs
(such as price support) can maintain or increase production above
what would otherwise be the case, using greater amounts of inputs
that have harmful environmental effects. This can contribute to
loss of biodiversity as well as water pollution from greater use of
fertilisers and pesticides (and from manure application causing
nutrient run-off due to higher numbers of livestock), soil erosion,
and increased greenhouse gas emissions. In some regions however
such policies can maintain extensive production, traditional farming
systems and practices that are associated with the preservation of
environmentally sensitive land or valued ecosystems and biodiversity.
Not all forms of agricultural support are environmentally-harmful,
and some support measures are targeted to the achievement
of specic environmental objectives, including biodiversity.
Some support, for example, pays for research and development,
information and advice, food inspection services or the provision
by farmers of non-marketed environmental services, such as
biodiversity, ood and drought control, sinks for greenhouse gases
and carbon storage. In some countries, income support is conditional
on the respect of environmental and other regulations.
Key links:
www.oecd.org/agriculture/env/indicators
www.oecd.org/agriculture/agriculturalpoliciesandsupport/
producerandconsumersupportestimatesdatabase.htm
BIODIVERSITY AND FISHERIES
The oceans are home to an extraordinarily
rich and diverse marine life. The marine
environment is under pressure from a
variety of ocean activities as well as climate
change. Maintaining a healthy level of
marine biodiversity helps ensure the oceans will remain a productive
food source and a provider of other valuable ecosystem services.
Fisheries and aquaculture are an important source of nutrition and
livelihoods for many coastal communities, but putting these sectors
on a sustainable footing has been a challenge.
The OECD has been helping to tackle the economic, social and
environmental challenges facing sheries and aquaculture for many
years. Two reports, The Economics of Rebuilding Fisheries: Workshop
Proceedings (from a workshop in Rhode Island, May 2009) and
Rebuilding Fisheries: The Way Forward (2012), provide evidence-based
guidelines for economists, biologists, sheries managers and policy
makers on how to best rebuild depleted sheries. On the basis of this
work, the OECDs Council, in April 2012, agreed to a Recommendation
on Principles and Guidelines for the Design and Implementation of
Plans for Rebuilding Fisheries.
Released in 2013, The OECD Handbook for Fisheries Managers illustrates
how to design and implement policies to maximise the economic
and social value of the sheries while conserving marine biodiversity
and habitats. Future work is aimed at demonstrating how the OECDs
green growth principles can help the sheries and aquaculture
sectors to be a source of sustainable economic growth in particular
by increasing efciency, reducing waste and improving governance.
Key link: www.oecd.org/sheries

BIODIVERSITY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Modern biotechnology offers a wide range
of new products in the elds of industry,
health and agriculture. Agricultural
applications, as well as those for forestry
and animal breeding, can lead to the
use of new varieties with traits which
offer improvements in yield or, for example, the decreased use of
pesticides through pest resistance. Drought-tolerant varieties are
becoming available for major crops such as maize. In the future,
other traits such as ood resistance, soil salinity tolerance, or carbon
assimilation could play a role in the adaptation to climate change
and the reduction of agricultures environmental footprint.
However these innovations new varieties of plants, animals or
micro-organisms should only be used after taking into account
their potential negative impacts on the environment, including
biodiversity. Such biosafety concerns are recognised and many
countries have a system in place to ensure environmental safety,
especially with respect to transgenic crops. The Series of OECD
Consensus Documents developed on the biology of major
agricultural species, trees, micro-organisms, as well as introduced
traits, aims to provide practical tools for national authorities
when dealing with environmental risk and safety assessment. In
consultation with the FAO and the CBD Secretariat on biosafety
clearing-house activities, the OECD has developed a database on
biotech products in which varieties authorised for release to the
environment are described.
The basis for the improvement of crop plants and agricultural
animals depends upon access to a wide range of genetic resources.
The loss of biodiversity could compromise the potential to obtain
improved varieties which could adapt to changing conditions.
Biodiversity conservation is therefore crucial for the efciency of
future breeding work.
Key link: www.oecd.org/biotrack
Sugarcane was the rst drought-tolerant
variety developed by Indonesian public
research and should be grown beginning in
2014. Wheat and poplar trees are also among
the promising species studied for genetic
improvements of their resistance to abiotic
stress, including water scarcity.
Did you know...?
SECTOR-SPECIFIC ANALYSIS
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www.oecd.org/env/biodiversity
env.contact@oecd.org
PUBLICATIONS AND REPORTS
Bagnoli, P., T. Goeschl and E. Kovacs (2008), People and Biodiversity Policies:
Impacts, Issues and Strategies for Policy Action, OECD Publishing,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264034341-en.
Karousakis, K. (2009), Promoting Biodiversity Co-Benets in REDD
OECD Environment Working Papers, No. 11. OECD Publishing,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/220188577008.
OECD (2013), Scaling-up Finance Mechanisms for Biodiversity,
OECD Publishing, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264193833-en.
OECD (2013), OECD DAC statistics Biodiversity-related Aid: http://www.oecd.
org/dac/stats/documentupload/Biodiversity-related%20aid%20Flyer%20
-%20December%202013_FINAL.pdf.
OECD (2013), The OECD Handbook for Fisheries Managers: Principles and
Practice for Policy Design, OECD Publishing,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264191150-en.
OECD (2012), Illegal Trade in Environmentally Sensitive Goods,
OECD Publishing, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264174328-en.
OECD (2012), OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of
Inaction, OECD Publishing, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264122246-en.
OECD (2011), OECD Environmental Performance Reviews: Norway 2011,
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